Corrections and clarifications

• An article said that Tony Hayward, chief executive of BP, had been mocked at a congressional hearing for having a $6bn salary. We meant $6m ('I don't recall', 18 June, page 6).

• Accompanying a business story about UK infrastructure was a map of mainland Britain that showed various installations and company bases, and was headlined: British infrastructure assets that have been snapped up by foreign companies (15 May, page 47). However, two of the examples shown were at odds with the heading. The part-ownership of Eurostar by France's SNCF is not a snap-up because Eurostar was conceived and came into being as an Anglo-French partnership. In Anglesey, no acquisition of an existing facility was involved in the example of a nuclear reactor due to be built from scratch by Germany's E.ON and RWE (though this example did, of course, represent a foreign move into the infrastructure sector as such). On a separate point, the map mislabelled the Sellafield nuclear site in Cumbria as now being managed by Areva of France. Actually, Areva is the smallest partner in a consortium contracted to decommission and clean up the – state-owned – site: lead partner with 44 shares is a division of the URS Corp of the United States; Britain's Amec plc has 36 shares, and Areva, 20.

• A quoted remark about how barriers to publishing one's poetry have been broken by the internet – "Now everyone has the potential to be creative" – should have been attributed to Francesca Beard, a performance poet, instead of to Holly Hopkins, who was shown in the adjacent photo (A poetic moment, 18 June, page 4, G2).